A new hide-away kitchen from Valcucine
Italian kitchen manufacturer Valcucine chose Toronto for its North American roll out of Artematica, a new kitchen system that does a really clever disappearing act.
Here's my picture of the Artematica when it is all closed.
And here it is opened up.
I had a hard time getting a decent image of the dimensions of this issue so the subsequent photos are from Valcucine.
Here's a wide angle shot of the Artematica in its closed function.
The cabinetry and counters are all made from the same, acid-etched glass. The glass feels fantastic to the touch and doesn't show fingerprints. The cutting board the sits just above the counter is on a track and it rolls along the entire length of the base cabinets.
The decrease doorways at the wall cabinets aren't certainly doorways, they slide down out of view while they're now not in use. The top doors tilt up an out of the way.
Once open, the kitchen reveals itself. There's a pot filler faucet behind the cook top, a proper kitchen faucet behind the sink, a ventilation hood over the cook top and storage galore.
There's a extremely good amount of concept and engineering that went into this kitchen. I'm clearly taken by using the manner it folds up on itself and disappears while its no longer in use.
What do you believe you studied? Is this a success or a omit?